29 Aug 2026
Anchorage/Whittier, Alaska, USA
01:00
18:00
30 Aug 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
31 Aug 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
1 Sep 2026
Nome, Alaska
08:00
18:00
2 Sep 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
3 Sep 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
4 Sep 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
5 Sep 2026
Herschel Island , Canada
08:00
18:00
6 Sep 2026
Northwest Passage Experience
01:00
01:00
7 Sep 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
8 Sep 2026
Northwest Passage Experience
08:00
18:00
9 Sep 2026
Cambridge Bay Village
08:00
15:00
10 Sep 2026
Northwest Passage Experience
13:01
19:00
11 Sep 2026
Northwest Passage Experience
13:01
19:00
12 Sep 2026
Northwest Passage Experience
01:00
01:00
13 Sep 2026
Northwest Passage Experience
01:00
01:00
14 Sep 2026
Croker Bay
08:00
13:01
Croker Bay is an Arctic waterway in Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut, Canada. It lies off the southern coast of Devon Island in the eastern high Arctic. Like Maxwell Bay to the west, it is an arm of Lancaster Sound and Barrow Strait. The abandoned Dundas Harbour is 32.1 miles to the east.
14 Sep 2026
Dundas Harbour (Devon Island)
15:00
19:00
Croker Bay is a 35 kilometer (20 miles) deep fjord on the southern shore of Devon Island and is flanked by colorful 450 metre (1,500’) high table-like mountains. The tidewater glacier at its head descends 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the icefield at the center of the island and terminates in spectacular cliffs of ice. Some 3.5 kilometers (2 miles) wide, the glacial front calves huge amounts of ice into the bay. Here polar bears, seals and even a pod of beluga whales can be seen travelling amongst the brash ice. To the east is the abandoned community of Dundas Harbour. The derelict buildings of the R.C.M.P. post are all that remain and serve as a silent reminder to the 52 Inuit that came here in 1934. Here, set amongst a landscape aglow in the colors of Arctic Autumn, lay the stark white crosses and picket fence enclosure of one of the most northerly cemeteries on Earth. Nearby, 1,000 year old stone remains of earlier Inuit settlers can be found.
15 Sep 2026
Pond Inlet, Nunavut, Canada
08:00
13:01
16 Sep 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
17 Sep 2026
Ilulissat
08:00
18:00
Located in Disco Bay, Ilulissat is home to Sermeq Kujalleq, the fastest-moving glacier in the world. This tremendous river of ice flows from the Greenland Ice Shield toward the sea, funneling through a narrow opening at nearly 40 meters a day. Designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site, it is the “Mother of Icebergs” that fills its fjord and the bay with great quantities of floating icebergs that parade down the bay and into the Atlantic Ocean. No formal excursions are planned for the town, which is home to about 4,600 people and some 3,500 sled dogs.
18 Sep 2026
Sisimiut, Greenland
08:00
17:00
Sisimiut is Greenland’s second-largest town, and large by Greenland standards, housing some 6,000 people. It is located just north of the Arctic Circle, and is a popular base for visitors seeking adventurous pastimes in the surrounding country. Although there are no shore excursions planned for Sisimiut, guests may wish to investigate the local market, where the products of the country are sold, including meat from whales, reindeer, musk oxen and many kinds of fish. Watch for the stocky little Icelandic horses trotting along the highways, and keep an eye out for sea eagles often seen perched on the surrounding mountains. Whales are also often seen in the sea nearby. On the hill above the harbor, there is an artisan’s workshop where they create and sell Inuit crafts, and nearby is the town museum, which has examples of colonial period houses, peat houses and other early buildings.
19 Sep 2026
Nuuk, Greenland
08:00
15:00
Greenland’s capital boasts some 16,000 inhabitants. Although the town does not offer us any shore excursions, there are several attractions which guests may wish to visit. One is the roofed town market, where the products of the nearby sea and wilderness are for sale, including the meat of whales, seals, birds and fish. The Katuaq Cultural Center offers changing exhibitions. Especially worth a visit is the National Museum, which besides many historic objects, contains the quite famous 500-year old mummies recovered from Qilakitsoq. The nearby Museum of Art has works by both Inuit and Nordic artists. There is also an artisan’s center where guests may purchase locally produced works, and a collection of traditional houses.
20 Sep 2026
Kangerlussuaq
08:00
18:00
In October, 1941 the United States Army Air Force constructed an airbase at the site of Kangerlussuaq. It served as a refuelling stop for single-engine military aircraft being flown to Britain during World War II. Form their last port of call, Goose Bay, Labrador, it was 1,600 kilometers (1,000 miles) to Kangerlussuaq until they could refuel. Kangerlussuaq fjord (‘Big Fjord’), is 170 kilometers (105 miles) long and was often shrouded in fog, providing a serious navigation problem for those aircrews. Today, with the use of modern technology, navigation is no longer an issue. The landscape was ideal for the site of an airport. A large alluvial plain, deposited by the nearby glacial-outflow river, provided a perfectly flat environment for an airport. Kangerlussuaq is the largest commercial airport in Greenland and supports a population of 500. A little known fact, from 1971 to 1987, 33 missiles from various countries, were fired from Kangerlussuaq for upper atmospheric scientific research.
21 Sep 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
22 Sep 2026
Pangnirtung
08:00
13:01
22 Sep 2026
Kekerten Island
15:30
19:00
23 Sep 2026
Lady Franklin Island, Nunavut, Canada
09:00
13:01
Lady Franklin Island, is an uninhabited Baffin Island offshore island located in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago in the territory of Nunavut. The island lies in Davis Strait, 25 mi from Hall Peninsula. There are at least seven smaller, unnamed islands off its northwest shore.
23 Sep 2026
Monumental Island
14:00
19:00
Montserrat is a mountainous Caribbean island, part of the Lesser Antilles chain and a British Overseas Territory. Its Soufrière Hills volcano erupted in the 1990s, causing significant damage to the south of the island and leading to the creation of an exclusion zone. The north of the island is largely unaffected, and has black-sand beaches, coral reefs, cliffs and shoreline caves.
24 Sep 2026
Lower Savage Islands, Canada
08:00
13:01
24 Sep 2026
Resolution Island, Nunavut, Canada
14:00
18:00
25 Sep 2026
Nachvak Fiord, Torngat Mts, Canada
08:00
20:00
26 Sep 2026
Ramah Bay, Torngat Mts, Canada
05:00
13:30
26 Sep 2026
Rose Island, Torngat Mts, Canada
16:30
20:30
27 Sep 2026
Hebron, NL, Canada
09:00
18:00
28 Sep 2026
Nain, NL, Canada
10:00
18:00
29 Sep 2026
Indian Harbour, NL, Canada
10:30
18:00
30 Sep 2026
Battle Harbour, Labrador, Canada
08:00
12:30
30 Sep 2026
LAnse aux Meadows
15:30
20:00
Located at the most northerly tip of Newfoundland, L’Anse aux Meadows is nestled near the fishing village of St. Anthony. It is the site of the first European settlement in the New World, approximately 500 years before Columbus’ arrival. Other Norse groups had relocated from their homelands to the New World. In 1961, explorer and writer Helge Instad discovered a group of large mounds in the countryside. These mounds were excavated revealing the remains of a Norse settlement. This site became L’Anse aux Meadows National Historic Park in 1977 and is noted on the UNESCO World Heritage List of important cultural properties. The site at L’Anse aux Meadows has been completely excavated allowing visitors to see the remains of the homes, a smithy, and various worksheds. The park’s interpretive center displays Norse artifacts from the excavation which include iron rivets, a flywheel and the floorboard of a boat. Researchers still debate as to whether the site at L’Anse aux Meadows is Leif Eriksson’s ‘Vinland,’ a lush, beautiful area where he settled in for the winter around the year 1000. Parks Canada will greet you on disembarking the ship and you may explore at leisure this first settlement of the New World.
1 Oct 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
2 Oct 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
3 Oct 2026
At Sea
01:00
01:00
4 Oct 2026
Halifax
08:00
01:00
With its exceptionally delightful harbor side setting, early Europeans were first attracted to Halifax in 1749 with the establishment here of a military outpost by Colonel Cornwallis. The ports natural advantages of a well-protected harbor and close proximity to major fishing grounds resulted in its growth into a major military base and sea port. The peninsula has had several major immigrations during its history; English, French, German, Irish and Scottish have come in substantial numbers at various times. Travelers familiar with the South Pacific will find it interesting to know that Captain James Cook, whose explorations defined most of the Pacific Basin for Europeans, also spent four years in Halifax charting Nova Scotia and the waters of the St. Lawrence. A college town, Halifax has an exhilarating and youthful air about it, as evidenced by many bicyclists and skateboarders. The heart of Halifax offers wonderful restaurants and shopping, galleries, museums, and sites of historic interest including the Naval Dockyard, which dates from 1757, and St. Paul’s Church. Heading out of town, the wonders of nature are to be found in the form of the sea, with the smell of salty air, cool ocean breezes, and the powerful force of waves crashing against the rugged shoreline.